The space environment

Space, as considered here, is defined as all the reaches of the universe beyond Earth’s atmosphere. There is no definitive boundary above Earth at which space begins, but, in terms of the limiting altitude for vehicles designed for atmospheric flight, it may be considered to be as low as 45 km (28 miles). The lowest practical orbit for an artificial satellite around Earth is about 160 km (100 miles). By comparison, Earth’s natural satellite, the Moon, orbits the planet at a mean distance about 2,400 times greater—at 384,400 km (239,000 miles). Even this distance, however, is small compared with the size of the solar system, where spacecraft must traverse interplanetary distances measured in the hundreds of millions to billions of kilometres, and it is infinitesimal compared with the size of the universe. Earth’s nearest neighbouring stars lie more than 40 trillion km (25 trillion miles) away.

The space that separates cosmic objects is not entirely empty. Throughout this void, matter—mostly hydrogen—is scattered at extremely low densities. Nevertheless, space constitutes a much greater vacuum than has been achieved on Earth. Additionally, space is permeated by gravitational and magnetic fields, a wide spectrum of electromagnetic radiation, and high-energy cosmic ray particles. Until the end of World War II, all deductions about space had been made from observations through the distorting atmosphere of Earth. With the advent of sounding rockets in the late 1940s and then of instrumented satellites, space observatories, probes, and manned spacecraft, it became possible to directly explore the complexities of space phenomena.

Another important environmental attribute of space is microgravity, a condition achieved by the balance between the centrifugal acceleration of an Earth-orbiting spacecraft and Earth’s gravity. This condition, in which there is no net force acting on a body, can be simulated on Earth only by free fall in an evacuated "drop tower."

Molniya: Molniya 1SovfotoSpacecraft is a general term for objects launched into space—e.g., Earth-orbiting satellites and space probes, experiment capsules, the orbiting modules of some launch vehicles (e.g., the U.S. space shuttle or the Russian Soyuz), and space stations. Spacecraft are considered separately from the rocket-powered vehicles that launch them vertically into space or into orbit or boost them away from Earth’s vicinity (seesounding rocket and launch vehicle). A space probe is an unmanned spacecraft that is given a velocity great enough to allow it to escape Earth’s gravitational attraction. A deep-space probe is a probe sent beyond the Earth-Moon system; if sent to explore other planets, it is also called a planetary probe. An experiment capsule is a small unmanned laboratory that is often recovered after its flight. A space station is an artificial structure placed in orbit and equipped to support human habitation for extended periods.

Explorer: Explorer 10NASASpacecraft differ greatly in size, shape, complexity, and purpose. Those that share similarities in design, function, or both are often grouped into program families—e.g., Gorizont, Meteor, Molniya, Resurs, Soyuz, and Uragan in Russia; Explorer, Galaxy, Iridium, Milstar, Navstar, Nimbus, Orbview, Telstar, and Voyager in the United States; Astra, Europestar, Envisat, Hotbird, Meteosat, and SPOT in Europe; Anik and Radarsat in Canada; Dong Fang Hong, Fengyun, and Shenzhou in China; Insat in India; and Ofeq in Israel. Lightness of weight and functional reliability are primary features of spacecraft design. Depending on their mission, spacecraft may spend minutes, days, months, or years in the environment of space. Mission functions must be performed while exposed to high vacuum, microgravity, extreme variations in temperature, and strong radiation.

A general differentiation of spacecraft is by function—scientific or applications. A scientific satellite or probe carries instruments to obtain data on magnetic fields, space radiation, Earth and its atmosphere, the Sun or other stars, planets and their moons, and other astronomical objects and phenomena. Applications spacecraft have utilitarian tasks, such as telecommunications, Earth observation, military reconnaissance, navigation and position-location, power transmission, and space manufacturing.

Although the designs of the various spacecraft families and special-purpose spacecraft vary widely, there are nine general categories of subsystems found on most spacecraft. They are (1) the power supply, (2) onboard propulsion, (3) communications, (4) attitude control (i.e., maintaining a spacecraft’s orientation toward a specific direction and pointing its instruments precisely at selected targets), (5) environmental control (mainly regulation of the spacecraft components’ temperatures), (6) guidance, navigation, and flight control, (7) computer and data processing, (8) structure (the skeleton framework of the spacecraft that physically supports all other subsystems), and (9) a "health-monitoring" system that monitors the status of the spacecraft and its payload.

Launching into space

Earth’s gravitational attraction was one of the major obstacles to spaceflight. Because of the observations and calculations of earlier scientists, rocket pioneers understood Newton’s laws of motion and other principles of spaceflight, but the application of those principles had to await the development of rocket power to launch a spacecraft to the altitude and velocity required for its mission.

A spacecraft and its launch vehicle are projected upward by the unbalanced pressure inside the rocket engine. There is high pressure on the closed front end of the rocket’s thrust chamber but much lower pressure on the open back end, where the exhaust gases flow out the chamber’s nozzle. This unbalanced force is called the rocket’s thrust. If the total thrust of the engines were exactly equal to the weight of the entire spacecraft–launch-vehicle assembly at liftoff, the assembly would not move. But if, for example, the thrust were twice that weight, the assembly would rise at an initial acceleration equal to the standard gravitational acceleration of 9.8 metres (32.2 feet) per second per second. As propellant mass is consumed and ejected from the rocket engines, the vehicle continually lightens. Therefore, if the thrust is maintained constant, the vehicle’s acceleration increases as it rises.

Earth’s gravitational pull on the rising spacecraft subsides gradually. At an altitude of 160 km (100 miles) it is still 95 percent of that at Earth’s surface, and at 2,700 km (1,680 miles) it is 50 percent (4.9 metres per second per second). For the purpose of spaceflight, the gravitational pull of Earth becomes negligible only at distances of several million kilometres, except when a spacecraft approaches the Moon and lunar gravity (one-sixth that of Earth) becomes predominant.

Most spacecraft are launched vertically. But if the vehicle’s velocity remains perpendicular to Earth’s surface, it will not go into orbit but will eventually fall back to Earth (unless it can attain a velocity high enough to escape Earth’s gravitational influence). To achieve Earth orbit, the launch vehicle must be turned so that its velocity vector is parallel to Earth’s surface. When it reaches a speed high enough that the centrifugal acceleration of its curved path around Earth exactly balances Earth’s gravitational pull at that altitude, the spacecraft will be in orbit.

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